alternative and emerging technologies in health services ... · overview of technologies (cont) 11...
TRANSCRIPT
Alternative & Emerging Technologies in Health Services Research Joseph Kim, MD, MPH Miriam Komaromy, MD & Wesley Pak, MBA Kamal Jethwani, MD, MPH
April 11th, 2012
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Agenda • Welcome
• Mark Belanger, TA Team, Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative • Vera Rosenthal, AHRQ NRC, Health IT Program Manager
• Speaker Presentations • Joseph Kim, MD, MPH • Miriam Komaromy, MD & Wesley Pak, MBA • Kamal Jethwani, MD, MPH
• Questions & Discussion
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Technical Assistance Overview • Goal: To support grantees in the meaningful progress and on-time completion of
Health IT Portfolio-funded grant projects • Technical Assistance (TA) is delivered in three ways:
• One-on-one individual TA • Multi-grantee webinars • Multi-grantee peer-to-peer teleconferences
• Ongoing evaluation to improve TA offerings
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Key Resources • AHRQ National Resource Center for Health IT
• www.healthit.ahrq.gov • AHRQ Point of Contact
• Vera Rosenthal, [email protected] • AHRQ NRC TA Team
• Kai Carter and Allyson Miller: Booz Allen Hamilton; [email protected]; [email protected]
• Mark Belanger and Rachel Kell: Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative, [email protected]
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Housekeeping • All phone lines are UN-muted • You may mute your own line at any time by pressing *6 (or via your phone’s mute
button); press * 7 to un-mute • Questions may also be submitted at any time via ‘Chat’ feature on webinar
console • Brief online evaluation form for completion by all participants at conclusion of
Webinar • Discussion summary will be distributed to attendees
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Grantee Roll Call • Name, Organization, Project PI
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Today’s Presentation Alternative & Emerging Technologies in Health Services Research Facilitator: Mark Belanger, AHRQ NRC TA Team, Massachusetts eHealth
Collaborative
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Today’s Objectives • Outline current and potential health care applications for specific emerging and
alternative technologies of interest to health services researchers • Discuss obstacles to use of these technologies in health services research • Provide information on mobile technologies, telemedicine, and social
media/networking as they pertain to health care and health services research • Share experiences and recommendations amongst grantees
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Overview of Technologies
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Overview of Technologies
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Overview of Technologies (cont)
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Overview of Technologies (cont)
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Overview of Technologies (cont)
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Today’s Presenters • Dr. Joseph Kim, President of Medical Communications Media, Inc.
• The Evolving World of Mobile Health and Healthcare
• Dr. Miriam Komaromy, Medical Director for the Integrated Addiction and Psychiatry TeleECHO Clinic, University of New Mexico School of Medicine and Wesley Pak, MBA Systems and Programming Manager Project ECHO, Department of Medicine, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center • Use of Telehealth Technology for Research: The ECHO Model
• Dr. Kamal Jethwani, Lead Research Scientist Center for Connected Health, Partners Healthcare • Social Media: Opportunities and Applications for Health Services Research
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Joseph Kim, MD, MPH The Evolving World of Mobile Health and Healthcare
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Evolving World of Mobile Health • For physicians/health care professionals:
• Telemedicine: diagnosis and treatment • Clinical decision support • Communicating with other clinicians • Social media interactions • Medical information updates, and education
• For patients/consumers: • Health education • Disease self-management • Behavior modification
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FDA Regulation • Draft Guidance for Industry and Food and Drug Administration Staff - Mobile
Medical Applications • Document issued on July 21, 2011 • Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) • Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER)
• Awaiting final draft
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Dermatology • Handyscope
• iPhone attachment • Polarized light • 20x magnification • Skin cancer screening • Encrypted data
Not approved in the USA http://www.handyscope.net/
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Detecting E. coli • Researchers at UCLA
• Developed a cell phone–based fluorescent imaging and sensing platform that can detect the presence of the bacterium Escherichia coli in food and water.
• The cost-effective cell-phone attachment acts as a florescent microscope, quantifying the emitted light from each capillary after the specific capture of E. coli particles within a sample.
http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/ucla-engineers-create-cell-phone-229249.aspx
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Conducting Eye Exams • Researchers at the MIT Media Lab:
• CATRA is a phone camera attachment designed to detect cataracts. It “scans the lens of the eye and creates a map showing position, size, shape and density of cataracts.”
• NETRA is phone camera attachment designed for refractive tests http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2011/netra-cataracts-app-0701.html
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Cardiology: Hate Rate to EKG
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CancerTrials App by MedTrust Online • Features include:
• Quickly locate Clinical Trials that are recruiting patients within 150 miles of your location
• View search results of Clinical Trials on a map relative to your location (or manually enter a US Zip Code)
• Simple text search to locate Clinical Trials within your area • Developed in collaboration with GlaxoSmithKline http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cancer-trials/id376117391?mt=8
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Medical Education Going Mobile • Epocrates Mobile CME powered by RealCME • QuantiaMD • References: Medscape, UpToDate, Skyscape, Unbound Medicine, etc. • Journals • ReachMD (Satellite radio)
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Online Medical Communities • Sermo • QuantiaMD • Doximity
HIPPA Data Security
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Sermo by Sermo, Inc. • iConsult –instantly share clinical images and ask questions to capture feedback
and advice from colleagues across the United States. • Discussions - Share insights and expertise on clinical cases, practice
management, healthcare policy, and more. http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/sermo/id438752890?mt=8
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QuantiaMD • Compete in the Monthly Medical Challenge – real cases and expert knowledge
challenges • Expert Practice Series segments – 8-10 minute clinical presentations • Interact with colleagues • Earn Q-Points http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quantiamd/id305777377?mt=8
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Doximity By Doximity • Secure messaging among physicians (HIPAA-compliant) • Refer patients • Follow-up on consultations • Send and receive faxes http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/doximity-free/id393642611?mt=8
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Texting Underserved Communities
• Temple's School of Medicine received a $100,000 grant from Verizon Foundation
• Telemedicine Light, a program designed to educate members of the surrounding neighborhoods on cardiovascular health by crafting and sending targeted, customized e-mail messages
• Patients will receive a weekly message from Temple containing facts and tips on cardiovascular disease and how to prevent it.
• Overcoming barriers to disseminating health information effectively in a medically underserved community
http://www.temple.edu/medicine/verizon_foundation.htm
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Texting & Medication Adherence • Ongoing studies:
• Geriatric patients • Smoking cessation • Schizophrenia • HIV • Diabetes
http://journals.lww.com/greenjournal/Abstract/2010/09000/Using_Daily_Text_Message_Reminders_t o_Improve.13.aspx http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD009756/abstract http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/study-texting-improves-medication-adherence-teens-diabetes-0 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19822583 http://www.socialworktoday.com/archive/012312p6.shtml
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Free Mobile Phones • FREE Phone + 250 FREE Voice Minutes • Assurance Wireless is a Lifeline Assistance program brought to you by Virgin
Mobile and supported by the federal Universal Service Fund. • For qualifying government programs or are income eligible: Medicaid, Food
Stamps/SNAP, Social Security Income (SSI), http://www.assurancewireless.com/Public/Welcome.aspx
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Pill Reminder Pro (Push Notification) By Winkpass Creations, Inc. Features:
• Reminds you with PUSH alerts when to take your pills• Great for medication, birth control pills and supplements• Tracks pill names, dosage and frequency• Keeps track of your pills
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pill-reminder-pro-push-notification/id343499340?mt=8
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Walgreens Mobile App By Walgreens • Express refills by scanning the bar code • SMS when you prescription is ready for pickup • Text FLU to 21525 and find the nearest Walgreens with flu shots http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/walgreens/id335364882?mt=8
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Dangers of Mobile Health Apps • Not regulated (yet) • Confusion regarding “medical” vs. “health” apps • Anyone can develop and release a mobile app that gets classified as “medical” or
“health” • Medical information may be outdated, erroneous, or misleading • Patient privacy & data security concerns
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Swine Flu “Apps” http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/swine-flu-detector/id315041953?mt=8 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/!-swine-flu-detector/id295517288?mt=8 http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/swine-flu-scanner-free-fingerprint/id348868094?mt=8
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Diabetic Dosage: an Insulin Calculator By Kalianne Neumann “It uses the correction number recommended by your physician, your current blood glucose level, and the amount of carbohydrate units you are anticipating to consume in order to assist you in calculating your fast-acting insulin dosage.” http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/diabetic-dosage-insulin-calculator/id421962268?mt=8
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MelApp By Health Discovery Corporation • “MelApp for iPhone is an image-based risk assessment mobile app that assists in
the early detection of melanoma.” http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/melapp/id446669257?mt=8&ls=1
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Data Security & Patient Privacy • Questions and concerns:
• Encryption requirements for video conferencing (telemedicine) • Encryption requirements for texting/SMS • Privacy of information stored on a mobile device • Privacy of online communities
• No clear guidance around HIPAA and mobile technology
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“iPhone keeps record of everywhere you go” “Privacy fears raised as researchers reveal file on iPhone that stores location coordinates and timestamps of owner's movements” April 2011
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“FaceTime calls are HIPPA compliant” Apple gear is HIPAA compliant when using WPA2 Enterprise security. It’s arguable that WPA and WPA/Personal connections are also compliant, but it’s debatable. Sept 2011
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Miriam Komaromy, MD & Wesley Pak, MBA Use of Telehealth Technology for Research: The ECHO Model
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A Different Telehealth Model • Most telemedicine involves one medical provider and one patient • The ECHO model connects specialists located in a hub (e.g. academic medical
center) with a network of individual healthcare providers • Model lends itself to supporting community-based research
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What is the ECHO model? • A consultative healthcare model designed to support primary care providers
(PCPs)
• Mission: develop capacity to safely and effectively treat common, complex diseases in rural and underserved areas
• Method: multiple, geographically dispersed PCPs connect weekly via video & telephone with disease specialists located in a central hosting location, such as an academic medical center
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TeleECHO Video Conferencing Infrastructure
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Project ECHO University of New Mexico Video Infrastructure
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iHealth Online Disease Management Tool
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iHealth Disease Management Tool
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iHealth Disease Management Tool
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iHealth Disease Management Tool
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iHeath Disease Management Tool
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iHealth Disease Management Tool
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iECHO Online TeleECHO Management Tool
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iECHO Clinic Records
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iECHO Clinic Report
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Project ECHO: Methods • Use technology to leverage scarce healthcare resources: tele / video
conferencing with Primary Care Providers (PCPs) in underserved areas • Case-based learning: PCPs present cases on weekly statewide teleconference
and receive feedback from specialists at UNM and other PCPs • Disease management model improves outcomes by sharing best practices • “Learning loops” help PCPs develop confidence and expertise of their own,
become resources in their own communities
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Research Opportunities Through Echo • Study outcomes of care: Hepatitis C Trial
• Study impact of ECHO on access to care: Addiction Program
• Use ECHO to disseminate innovations and study impact: SBIRT with DWI offenders
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Hepatitis C Trial Objectives • To train primary care Clinicians in rural areas and prisons to deliver hepatitis C
treatment to rural populations
• To show that outcomes of such care are as safe and effective as that given in a University Clinic
• To show that Project ECHO improves access to hepatitis C care for minorities Arora et al, NEJM, 2011
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Study Design • Prospective cohort study
• Randomization by patient, Clinician, or site not feasible • Advantages
• Uniform eligibility criteria • Standardized treatment • Prospective measurement of end-points
• Limitation: groups unbalanced with respect to patient covariates
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Principal Endpoint Sustained viral response (SVR): no detectable virus 6 months after completion of treatment
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Treatment Outcomes SAE = significant adverse event SVR = sustained viral response
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Conclusions from Hep C Trial
• Rural primary care Clinicians deliver hepatitis C care under the aegis of Project ECHO that is as safe and effective as that given in a University clinic
• Project ECHO improves access to hepatitis C care for New Mexico minorities
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Echo Addiction Treatment Program • Weekly telehealth clinic since 2006
• Addresses all addictions, but #1 focus is expanding buprenorphine treatment for opioid addiction
• Used ECHO to recruit providers to become trained in use of buprenorphine, and to support their practice and track impact
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Statewide Participation
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Ranking of # of Burprenorphine-Certified Providers Per Capita CSAT database of certified MDs 2005, 2009
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Increase in Bup-certified PCPs in Poor, Rural, and Heavily Hispanic Areas
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Survey of ECHO Bup Prescribes What has been the impact of prescribing buprenorphine on your clinical practice? Response choices from 0=strongly negative impact, 4=no impact, 5=somewhat positive, 7=strongly positive impact N=51, survey response rate 70%, 2010
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Use of ECHO to Disseminate Innovations • Recent study in urban health systems showed that a single SBIRT intervention
for heavy drinkers decreased DWIs for 5 years; effect stronger in Latinos
• Designing an ECHO study to implement in rural, predominantly Latino, community-based settings in rural NM
Davis et al, Population Health Mgmt, 2012
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How is ECHO useful for research? • Network of rural PCPs with positive relationship with an academic medical center
program
• Recruitment of rural, low income, minority patients
• High quality data collection through iHealth and iECHO • Conduit for rapid dissemination of innovations, EBPs • Opportunity to study uptake, provider knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs,
outcomes, impact on healthcare and health of the community
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Kamal Jethwani, MD, MPH Social Media: Opportunities and Applications for Health Services Research
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What is Social Media? • Forms of electronic communication through which users create online
communities to share information, ideas, personal messages, and other content • Blogs • Location-based Social Networks • Virtual Worlds • Bulletin Boards
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What is Social Media? • What is social media currently used for?
• INTERACTIVITY • How is it used and by whom (for healthcare)?
• Doctor to Doctor (Sermo) • Doctor to Patient (Facebook + Twitter) • Patient to Patient (PLM + CureTogether)
• All used for health information/guidance/support
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Opportunities • Recruitment • Engagement • Observation of social interactions • Direct interaction with patients • Crowd-sourced data for research • Dissemination of research
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Patient Recruitment • Opportunities for Recruitment
• Especially suited for: • Certain hard to reach populations (teenagers, rare diseases) • Large sample size recruitments • Multi-site recruitments • Studies needing very frequent contact with subjects
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Patient Recruitment • Distinguish between simply advertising on SM platforms, and actually using SM • Opportunities for recruitment
• Targeted Promotion to prospective subjects • Open Forum • Listening/Monitoring for leads • Using the ‘network’ effect
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Patient Recruitment • Some tips on using Social media effectively:
• Most social media users are tech-savvy. Focus on design and content of your campaign.
• Do not sell the campaign, sell the service/trial • Pay attention to the following privacy issues:
• Can potentially interested participants be identified by other users/other agencies if they express interest?
• Are you collecting any PHI with or without the knowledge of the participant? How is this stored?
• Are you following the user-terms and privacy guidelines of the platform you’re using?
• Once enrolled, can study participants identify each other on the SM platform?
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What’s in it for Patients? • Ability to provide more information • Self-directed learning • Better relevancy • Save time/effort • Maintain anonymity wherever possible
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Monitoring Success • Google analytics / other free or paid tracking tools • Split testing – find out exactly ‘what’ works • Pre-enrollment segmentation – target the population you want. • Post-enrollment segmentation – find out who is responding better, and tailor the
campaign accordingly Remember to include this in the consent form!
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Recruitment Successes • Mayo Clinic – SCAD* Study
• Research focusing on a rare disease • Concentrated and organized patient population • Patient-initiated research and ownership • Favorable demographics for patient recruitment • Widespread positive brand awareness • Lack of geographic constraints
*SCAD: Spontaneous coronary artery dissection
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Recruitment Challenges • Challenges:
• People on social media sites vary from general population. • Reliability of data collected (self reported) • General digital eco-system can impact your campaign • Changing rules or formats of SM platforms can greatly impact your
campaign • Increased clutter in the SM space makes it hard to stand out • Privacy/security concerns
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Recruitment Challenges • Pfizer – REMOTE 2.0
• World’s first “virtual” clinical trial • Aimed to recruit 600 patients for overactive bladder research • Failed to see what patients needed
• Apprehension around divulging medical information online [privacy concerns]
• Elderly population [not internet users] • Complicated enrollment [for the patient]
• Know your target audience
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Overcoming Recruitment Roadblocks • Overcoming challenges:
• Study design and population should dictate the use of SM • Use ‘social interaction’ creatively • Do not rely extensively on specialized design features of a specific SM
platform – keep it simple • Focus on using appropriate design – your users are likely to appreciate it! • More is more – when giving out information about your study – make
information readily available • Think hard about privacy and patient safety
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Research Design • 80% adults online (or 59% of all adults) seek health information online. • Seeking health information is the 3rd most common activity online today! • What do people talk about on SM?
• Treatment of disease conditions • Knowledge about diseases / adverse events • Social Implications of disease conditions
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Research Design • 66% adults use at least one SM platform regularly • SM allows researchers to study:
• Health seeking behaviors • What do people ask? Where do they look? • How do people help each other? • If SM can be used to improve care delivery? • If SM can be used to engage new populations? • Do social factors impact health?
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PatientsLikeMe • Wicks et al. (2012). Perceived benefits of sharing health data between people
with epilepsy on an online platform. Epilepsy & Behavior, 23(1), 16–23. • Wicks et al. (2011). Accelerated clinical discovery using self-reported patient data
collected online and a patient-matching algorithm. Nature Biotechnology, 29(5), 411–414.
• Frost et al (2011). Patient-reported Outcomes as a Source of Evidence in Off-Label Prescribing: Analysis of Data From PatientsLikeMe. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 13(1), e6.
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CureTogether • Patient-driven Research • Anonymous to encourage those dealing with the stigma of conditions/diseases • Focus on under-funded/under-researched conditions • LIVE research
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Social Media in Study Design • Opportunities in clinical research
• The data is already public; we have implied consent • Surfing personal data for screening is much more efficient than sending
preliminary questionnaires. • The data provides a more holistic view of participants and their behaviors. • The data is free of certain biases
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Research Design • Barriers
• Users may not think their data will be reviewed this way • Data gathered from such efforts may be false or misleading • Publishing results with such data may make it easier to identify
participants, causing harm • May violate web sites’ terms of service
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Research Dissemination • Redefining “Bench to Market.” Shifting focus from evidenced based outcomes in
pharma to population validated outcomes [instantaneous] • Instantaneous dissemination of research findings via Twitter, Facebook, etc.
invites instantaneous feedback • Meaningful dissemination
• Target populations for specific results ( i.e. teens w/ asthma) • Collaborate with Sponsor on dissemination (Sponsors have full-time
marketing departments)
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Privacy Case Study • The “Tastes, Ties and Time” Study
• Study to evaluate how people’s friendships and tastes evolve over time • Researchers downloaded 1700 ‘anonymous’ Facebook profiles. • The cohort was released publicly, and soon cracked to reveal that the
cohort was Harvard’s 2009 UG class. • Conclusions about specific people’s ‘ties and tastes’ were now public,
without their consent!
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Privacy Case Study (cont) • Where did they go wrong?
• Using ‘in network’ RA’s – to use their privileged access to download profile data
• Did not Remove or encode ALL “identifying” information • Release of ‘raw de-identified’ data to the public • Relative inexperienced IRB
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Addressing Privacy Concerns • IRB: Understanding federal regulations (ensure compliance for medical research)
• Protect all identifying information • Do subjects know their data can be analyzed? If not, tell them! • Can anyone who has access to de-identified data trace it back to
subjects? • Are all your sub-contractors (developers etc) HIPAA compliant?
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Privacy (cont) • IT:
• Where is the data being stored? • For how long? • Can it be de-identified completely? • Can it be destroyed completely? • Who owns it? • How public is it?
• Legal: • Understand terms of use and/or service, • Understand patient rights
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Conclusion Understanding the power of social media and fitting it in with regulatory environment of clinical research Think like a marketer.
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Discussion • We welcome your comments and questions • Reminder: press *6 to mute; press * 7 to un-mute • Questions may also be submitted via ‘Chat’ feature on webinar console at any
time
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Final Comments • Discussion Summary
• Will be distributed to all Webinar participants and posted on the AHRQ TA website
• Evaluation Form • Online evaluation form will appear on your screen at conclusion of
Webinar; we value your feedback. • Thank you for joining us today!
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Panelist Bio Joseph Kim, MD, MPH Dr. Kim is the President of MCM Education. Established in 1995, MCM develops certified continuing medical education (CME) activities in joint-sponsorship with accredited organizations. He is also the founder of several mobile health websites like MedicalSmartphones.com and MobileHealthComputing.com and currently serves on the Medical Advisory Board of Doximity. Dr. Kim holds a bachelor of science in engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a doctor of medicine from the University of Arkansas College of Medicine, and a master of public health from the University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Public Health. Contact email: [email protected]
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Panelist Bio Miriam Komaromy, MD Dr. Komaromy is a practicing physician, board certified in both internal medicine and addiction medicine. She launched the addiction treatment arm of Project ECHO in 2006 and has been serving as Medical Director, Integrated Addictions and Psychiatry Program Project ECHO, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center since it’s creation. In addition, Dr. Komaromy is the Medical Director for Turquoise Lodge Hospital, an addiction treatment hospital funded by the New Mexico Department of Health. Her main research interest is in studying the use of telehealth technology, in the form of the ECHO model, to expand access to health care for traditionally underserved communities. Contact email: [email protected]
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Panelist Bio Wesley Pak, MBA Wesley Pak is a Systems and Programming Manager at Project ECHO at the University of New Mexico. He received a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Maryland, a Master of Business Administration from the University of Phoenix, and is currently completing his PhD at the University of New Mexico. His areas of research are telehealth adoption, knowledge management and dissemination. Contact email: [email protected]
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Panelist Bio Kamal Jethwani, MD MPH; Lead Research Scientist, Center for Connected Health; Instructor in Dermatology, Harvard Medical School Dr. Jethwani currently leads the research and program evaluation initiatives at the Center for Connected Health. His research is focused on technology-based models of health delivery and use behavior change as a tool for preventive and supportive care in a tertiary health care setting. His work at the Center for Connected Health has spanned from designing and implementing clinical trials to leading efforts in predictive modeling using behavioral parameters. Kamal's research has evolved over time to include exploration of newer health delivery models, like employer based health programs and electronic social network based programs. He is also exploring newer tools to deliver feedback to patients, like simple text message based platforms, applications for smart phones, etc. The ability to personalize care and understand behavioral motivations that dictate health choices remains central to all his work at the Center. Contact email: [email protected]
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